HawkEye 360 has filed for a US IPO targeting a $2.4 billion valuation, seeking to raise up to $416 million by pricing 16 million shares at $24 to $26 each on the NYSE under the ticker "HAWK." Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley are leading the offering. BlackRock-affiliated entities are expected to hold a 5.1% stake post-IPO.
This is not a speculative space venture chasing a story. It is a business with a defined product, a government customer base, and a decade of technical execution behind it.
What HawkEye Actually Does
Founded in 2015 and headquartered in Virginia, HawkEye operates a constellation of 30 satellites that detect, geolocate, and analyse radio frequency signals from orbit. In practical terms: its satellites can identify the location and behaviour of any device emitting an RF signal: ships, aircraft, military equipment, communications infrastructure. Anywhere on earth, without requiring cooperation from the source.
Its primary customers are the US government and allied nations. That places it squarely in the commercial ISR (intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance) market, the segment of the defence industry that has seen sustained and growing procurement interest as geopolitical tensions have elevated the value of persistent, real-time situational awareness. A recent NASA contract to map RF interference in low Earth orbit adds a civil space dimension to what is otherwise a predominantly defence-facing revenue base.
Part of the IPO proceeds will fund the acquisition of Innovative Signal Analysis, announced in December, a move that deepens HawkEye's analytical capabilities at exactly the moment demand for them is rising.
Why Now
The IPO market had a difficult start to 2026. Volatile equity markets and Middle East escalation kept most listings on hold through the first quarter. What changed the calculus was SpaceX.
SpaceX's confidential IPO filing earlier this month sent a signal through the sector that the window was reopening. Space-tech CFOs, and their bankers, have been watching that process closely, and HawkEye's move to file now reflects a deliberate read of the market: the SpaceX filing creates institutional appetite for space infrastructure stories, and HawkEye is well-positioned to benefit from that halo before the window narrows again.
Crucially, HawkEye is pursuing a traditional IPO rather than a SPAC route. That matters for credibility. The SPAC wave of 2020 to 2022 left a graveyard of space companies that overpromised and underdelivered, and institutional investors have long memories. A conventional listing backed by Goldman and Morgan Stanley, with a track record of hitting technical milestones across its constellation build-out, is a materially different proposition.
Why It Matters
The listing is a useful signal about where institutional appetite for defence-adjacent space tech actually sits right now.
RF signal intelligence has moved from a niche capability to a core requirement across defence and maritime monitoring. The Middle East conflict has reinforced that. The ability to track vessel movements, monitor communications infrastructure, and identify RF emitters in contested environments is no longer a premium add-on to national security strategy. It is baseline capability. HawkEye's customer relationships reflect that shift, and the durability of government contracts provides the kind of revenue visibility that growth-stage space companies almost never have at IPO.
The listing reflects genuine investor appetite for space data businesses with durable government contracts, not speculative launch plays.
HawkEye sits at the intersection of two of the most well-funded investment priorities of this decade: allied defence spending, which is accelerating across NATO and Indo-Pacific partners, and commercial space infrastructure, which is attracting capital at a pace not seen since the early satellite era. That combination, proven technology, government revenue, structural tailwinds on both sides, is precisely what the post-SPAC institutional investor base is looking for in a space listing.
Whether the $2.4 billion valuation holds through the book-build will depend on how clearly HawkEye can articulate the revenue growth path from its current contract base. But the timing, the structure, and the underlying business make this one of the more credible space IPOs in years.



